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ESPN's Mobile Phone Lesson: All Sports--Not All The Time
by Wayne Friedman, Thursday, July 20, 2006, 11:40 AM

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The TV-on-cell-phone madness has just hung up.

Merrill Lynch says it's essentially crazy for ESPN to continue selling its way overpriced, branded mobile phone service. Merrill says ESPN will be lucky to get 30,000 subscribers. ESPN was projecting 240,000 subscribers. Merrill expects ESPN to lose $135 million on Mobile ESPN.

Pricing is a big issue. ESPN's corporate parent, Walt Disney, has had to quickly reduce the price of its branded handset--first made by Sanyo, now Samsung--to $99 from the $399 original price tag.

ESPN's hubris is that it owns male viewers, who are a key and elusive target for advertisers. ESPN will charge a big premium to get to them. The network's belief is that advertisers and consumers will pay anything to be associated with ESPN.

But now it has gone a bridge too far. Male viewers apparently don't want to pay anything to have immediate access to sports scores or enhanced sports videos.

ESPN started marketing the ESPN-branded mobile service during last February's Super Bowl. TV commercials had a dramatic tone at the time, with an ESPN-branded phone appearing on a serious black background and a pounding version of ESPN's "SportsCenter" theme music.

It was as if something revolutionary were going to happen. Technology-wise, this may have been true--but that's all.

Realizing there were serious problems, ESPN shifted its marketing and distribution. TV commercials said the phone and service could be bought through Sprint retail stores.

 The tremendous push from the mobile phone industry positions video entertainment as the holy grail. On last night's "Rock Star: Supernova," potential rock stars were huddled around the tiny screen of a cell phone reviewing their performances on Verizon's V Cast service. (Verizon has a branded entertainment deal with the show.)

 Excuse me? Can no one find a TV in that big rock mansion where they're staying?

That product placement failed. Better to turn off the two-inch video, and do something substantial: Find a signal that doesn't get dropped, make a call to your buddy, and go to the game.

5 comments on "ESPN's Mobile Phone Lesson: All Sports--Not All The Time"

  1. dan hadell from x
    commented on: July 20, 2006 at 2:51 PM
    the new, slimmer phone is really cool.

  2. Matt Archuleta from n/a
    commented on: July 20, 2006 at 1:33 PM
    I used to love watching sports at one time. But the corruption that has garnered most all professional and college sports has left me bitter. I don't watch at all. If I want to watch corruption all I have to do is turn on the local news. 'Sports' has to clean up its act (but it won't--I know!) So any idiot whom markets to a select group of male views is an idiot! (and has corrupted brain cells).

  3. Ron Aaron from The Winston School & UTSA
    commented on: July 20, 2006 at 12:31 PM
    Wayne, thank you. I thought I was the only one in America who doesn't get it -- why in the world would I want to watch video on a two-inch screen. Makes no sense. Then again, why in the world why I want to watch "Rock Star: Supernova?"

    Ron Aaron San Antonio, Texas

  4. david ackerman from solurtions Research Group
    commented on: July 20, 2006 at 12:28 PM
    I give them credit for taking the risk. This time for cell phones reminds me of the internet boom in the 90s. ESPN's problems also show the limits of MVNOs that have popped up everywhere on the hope of captializing on the mobility. The big problem is that cunsumers here are stil not ready to pay the kind of money they being charged for the kind of video content available on cell phones. David Ackerman

  5. Ted Biederman from Los Angeles Newspaper Group
    commented on: July 20, 2006 at 12:20 PM
    Right on. Our lives are too full to be worrying about sports 24/7 or anything else as soft for that matter. We're way over-connected and the multi-use cell phone is just another way of smothering our own creativity and keeping us distracted from the things - like family and friends - that are far more important. Besides which I can't see the damn thing anyway. Two-inch video screens - poppycock!

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WAYNE FRIEDMAN
  • Wayne Friedman is West Coast Editor of MediaPost.



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